dafydd
Banned
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- Feb 14, 2008
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Both Houses of Parliament start their business with prayers. How ironic.
http://www.parliament.uk/about/how/business/prayers/
http://www.parliament.uk/about/how/business/prayers/
Both Houses of Parliament start their business with prayers. How ironic.
http://www.parliament.uk/about/how/business/prayers/
There is no irony, parliament is soverign councils are not.
There are moves to get prayers changed in the house of commons, as attending prayers is the only way to reserve a seat if the house is going to be busy. No-one has suggested that these prayers are iligal.
I wasn't suggesting that they are illegal. I was referring to the hypocrisy.
You can still have prayers at the start of the meeting so long as they are not on the agenda of that meeting. It's a legal nicety but it's also a loophole that will be exploited.
Steve
What hypocrisy?
You must live a sheltered life.
I will defend to the death anyone's right to practice any faith, if it breaks no law, interferes with nobody's rights nor claims undue public policy influence. Church bells, calls to prayer, displays of crucifixes, beards or side-locks are freedoms, alongside bare midriffs and knicker-short miniskirts. Personally, I am affronted by women in face veils, but that's my problem. I will argue against them but freedom of speech, thought and dress are non-negotiable. But so is the right to robust argument that may offend religious sensibilities, including the right to challenge the improbability of the faith itself – and the right to make jokes.
Very clever.
Now, can you explain what you meant by hypocrisy in this case.
The fact that parliament has powers to do some things which councils don't is not hypocritical.
doesnt seem to have lasted very long..
"The government is activating a power it says will allow councils in England to hold prayers at meetings.
Communities secretary Eric Pickles says he is "effectively reversing" the High Court's "illiberal ruling" that a Devon council's prayers were unlawful."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17082136
doesnt seem to have lasted very long..
"The government is activating a power it says will allow councils in England to hold prayers at meetings.
Communities secretary Eric Pickles says he is "effectively reversing" the High Court's "illiberal ruling" that a Devon council's prayers were unlawful."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17082136
BBC radio news said today that the change has now been passed. So that Bideford council and others are now free to open their meetings by praying again.
Personally if I were on Bideford council, as someone who thinks that religious belief is obviously and demonstrably dangerous, as well as being made to look absurd by the discoveries of modern science, I think I would feel quite annoyed at Christians on the council insisting that every meeting must start with praying to God.
But perhaps any atheist members of the council can now equally claim the right to read aloud a short “sermon” of their beliefs about the dangerous of religion and the fact that discoveries like evolution have made a mockery of religious claims about God making Man.
The law is from 1972. So nobody noticed prayers were "illegal" for 40 years? doubtful. I think it's just pettiness combined with self-importance: the desire to "sock it" to religious people combined with the need to proclaim one's own "superiority" for being an atheist. All of course covered with legalistic excuses.
It's not a petty, self-important, or a legal excuse. The objection is nothing of that kind at all.
What you have here is Christian members of a local council insisting that everyone must be subject to them praying aloud to God at the start of each days business meetings.